Number of Collisions. Collisions are the result of two workstations
trying to use shared a transmission medium (cable) simultaneously,
e.g., using Ethernet CSMA/CD. The electrical signals, which carry
the information the workstations are sending, bump into each other,
ruining both signals. This means both workstations will have to
re-transmit their information. In most systems, a built-in delay will
make sure the collision does not occur again.
A value of 4294967294 indicates unknown.
Parsed from file CODIMA-EXPRESS-MIB.my.txt
Company: None
Module: CODIMA-EXPRESS-MIB
Number of Collisions. Collisions are the result of two workstations
trying to use shared a transmission medium (cable) simultaneously,
e.g., using Ethernet CSMA/CD. The electrical signals, which carry
the information the workstations are sending, bump into each other,
ruining both signals. This means both workstations will have to
re-transmit their information. In most systems, a built-in delay will
make sure the collision does not occur again.
A value of 4294967294 indicates unknown.
Parsed from file CODIMA-EXPRESS-MIB.mib
Module: CODIMA-EXPRESS-MIB
Vendor: CODIMA Technologies Ltd
Module: CODIMA-EXPRESS-MIB
[Automatically extracted from oidview.com]
sseCollisions OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX Counter32 MAX-ACCESS read-only STATUS current DESCRIPTION "Number of Collisions. Collisions are the result of two workstations trying to use shared a transmission medium (cable) simultaneously, e.g., using Ethernet CSMA/CD. The electrical signals, which carry the information the workstations are sending, bump into each other, ruining both signals. This means both workstations will have to re-transmit their information. In most systems, a built-in delay will make sure the collision does not occur again. A value of 4294967294 indicates unknown." ::= { ssEthernetEntry 6 }
sseCollisions OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX Counter32 MAX-ACCESS read-only STATUS current DESCRIPTION "Number of Collisions. Collisions are the result of two workstations trying to use shared a transmission medium (cable) simultaneously, e.g., using Ethernet CSMA/CD. The electrical signals, which carry the information the workstations are sending, bump into each other, ruining both signals. This means both workstations will have to re-transmit their information. In most systems, a built-in delay will make sure the collision does not occur again. A value of 4294967294 indicates unknown." ::= { ssEthernetEntry 6 }
OID | Name | Sub children | Sub Nodes Total | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
1.3.6.1.4.1.226.3.2.1.1.2.2.4.1.1 | sseTimeStampIndex | 0 | 0 | Identifies the History Time-stamp for this row. This is UTC time, measured in seconds from Midnight January 1st 1970. |
1.3.6.1.4.1.226.3.2.1.1.2.2.4.1.2 | sseTimeStamp | 0 | 0 | A textual representation of the associated TimeStampIndex object which shows the History time-stamp for this row. The value is in … |
1.3.6.1.4.1.226.3.2.1.1.2.2.4.1.3 | sseRunts | 0 | 0 | Number of Runts. Runts are frames which are smaller than the Ethernet minimum frames size of 64 bytes. A value of 4294967294 ind… |
1.3.6.1.4.1.226.3.2.1.1.2.2.4.1.4 | sseJabbers | 0 | 0 | Number of Jabber Frames. Jabbers are frames which exceed the Ethernet maximum packets size of 1518, they are most often caused b… |
1.3.6.1.4.1.226.3.2.1.1.2.2.4.1.5 | sseCrc | 0 | 0 | Number of CRC/Alignment Errors. CRC errors are frames which have been damaged. The Cyclic Redundancy Checksum used to confirm th… |
1.3.6.1.4.1.226.3.2.1.1.2.2.4.1.7 | sseLateCollisions | 0 | 0 | Number of Late Collisions. The term late collisions applies to collisions which occur late enough for the first 12 bytes of the f… |